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You've approved the five-year strategic plan. The board signed off. The 2030 vision is in the investor deck. And then — the CEO leaves in year three. The incoming leader declares a new strategic direction. And the organization's memory of the previous initiative is overwritten like an old hard drive. Every turnaround I've run has encountered this. The plan was right. The leadership continuity assumption was wrong. And middle managers are doing what middle managers do: quietly waiting out any initiative that lacks structural embedding. Today we decode why.
In this episode, Todd Hagopian — the original Stagnation Assassin — goes deep on the CEO tenure trap destroying multi-year transformation timelines: why the average CEO tenure has collapsed from 7.2 years to 4.9 years, why that's now functionally coterminous with the average transformation window, and what operators must do differently this week based on what Spencer Stuart's CEO Transitions data actually shows.
Todd breaks down why the answer isn't longer tenure — it's structural embedding — and the Three-S Method discipline that makes transformation survive the next leadership announcement.
Key topics covered:
The counterintuitive truth: A transformation that lives in the CEO's vision deck is not a transformation. It's a countdown timer waiting for the next leadership announcement. Short tenure is stagnation's most powerful ally — but only in organizations that never built the embedding discipline to survive it.
Grab Todd's book "The Unfair Advantage: Weaponizing the Hypomanic Toolbox" at https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FV6QMWBX
📖 Stagnation Assassin (Todd's Second Book) — https://www.amazon.com/Stagnation-Assassin-Anti-Consultant-Todd-Hagopian/dp/B0GV1KXJFN
Visit the world's largest stagnation slaughterhouse at StagnationAssassins.com
The Stagnation Assassin Show | Todd Hagopian | Stat of the Day
By Todd HagopianSend us Fan Mail
You've approved the five-year strategic plan. The board signed off. The 2030 vision is in the investor deck. And then — the CEO leaves in year three. The incoming leader declares a new strategic direction. And the organization's memory of the previous initiative is overwritten like an old hard drive. Every turnaround I've run has encountered this. The plan was right. The leadership continuity assumption was wrong. And middle managers are doing what middle managers do: quietly waiting out any initiative that lacks structural embedding. Today we decode why.
In this episode, Todd Hagopian — the original Stagnation Assassin — goes deep on the CEO tenure trap destroying multi-year transformation timelines: why the average CEO tenure has collapsed from 7.2 years to 4.9 years, why that's now functionally coterminous with the average transformation window, and what operators must do differently this week based on what Spencer Stuart's CEO Transitions data actually shows.
Todd breaks down why the answer isn't longer tenure — it's structural embedding — and the Three-S Method discipline that makes transformation survive the next leadership announcement.
Key topics covered:
The counterintuitive truth: A transformation that lives in the CEO's vision deck is not a transformation. It's a countdown timer waiting for the next leadership announcement. Short tenure is stagnation's most powerful ally — but only in organizations that never built the embedding discipline to survive it.
Grab Todd's book "The Unfair Advantage: Weaponizing the Hypomanic Toolbox" at https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FV6QMWBX
📖 Stagnation Assassin (Todd's Second Book) — https://www.amazon.com/Stagnation-Assassin-Anti-Consultant-Todd-Hagopian/dp/B0GV1KXJFN
Visit the world's largest stagnation slaughterhouse at StagnationAssassins.com
The Stagnation Assassin Show | Todd Hagopian | Stat of the Day